An AI agent for ecommerce operators
that actually runs your orders,
support queues, and admin work

Super operates real ecommerce tools — order dashboards, helpdesks, returns portals — and reuses a computer-use cache so repetitive workflows get faster and cheaper every time they run.

Built for the real workflows ecommerce operators live in

Order monitoring without dashboards

Super signs into your admin panels, checks order states, flags anomalies, and follows the same clicks you would — instead of relying on brittle API coverage.

Support queues handled like a human

From helpdesk inboxes to returns portals, Super opens the tools, reviews context, drafts replies, and escalates edge cases — repeatedly — with memory.

Repetitive admin that compounds

Refund checks, address fixes, SKU lookups, daily reconciliation — Super reuses its computer‑use cache so the tenth run is cheaper than the first.

Designed for agentic reality

As agentic AI expands across enterprise and ecommerce platforms, operators need tools that actually execute work, not just summarize it.

Why computer‑using agents matter right now

Computer use is becoming first‑class

Google has made computer use a core capability in Gemini 3.5 Flash, underscoring the shift from chatbots to agents that can actually operate software.

Source: blog.google

Automation is moving up‑market

Major acquisitions and investments show how valuable AI‑powered workflow automation has become for operational teams.

Source: Yahoo Finance

Security and realism matter

Recent flaws in open‑source agents highlight why production computer‑use systems must be intentionally designed and scoped.

Source: SC Media

How Super fits into the broader AI landscape

ChatGPT

Exceptional conversational AI for reasoning, writing, and planning. Increasingly agentic — but still primarily optimized for one‑off interactions.

Gemini

Strong browser‑native computer use and cost‑efficient models. Pushing the frontier of agent capabilities at platform scale.

Grok

Opinionated assistant with real‑time and social context, best suited for exploration and commentary.

Siri

Voice‑first assistant deeply embedded in Apple devices, optimized for consumer tasks rather than operational workflows.

Folk & Orchids

Niche tools within the broader automation and agent ecosystem, often focused on specific slices of workflow.

Super

Built for durable computer‑use workflows. Super’s defining advantage is a reusable computer‑use cache, making it sharper and cheaper for repeated ecommerce operations.

Updated market field guide

Real-time ops awareness

Live sales event

Live counters.

Ecommerce operators in 2026 are running businesses that look simple on the surface but behave like distributed systems underneath. Orders flow in from marketplaces, direct-to-consumer storefronts, social commerce, and wholesale portals. Customer support touches email, chat, social DMs, and marketplace messaging. Admin work spans refunds, fraud checks, fulfillment exceptions, VAT, and inventory reconciliation. The difference between a profitable store and a fragile one is no longer hustle; it is operational leverage.

Super is positioned as a personal AI agent for ecommerce operators who need that leverage. It connects order data, support workflows, and repetitive admin tasks into a single agentic loop. Instead of dashboards that wait for you to look at them, Super monitors, acts, and escalates. Recent advances in agent architectures, especially computer-use models and tool-based agents, make this shift practical rather than theoretical.

Market context

The agentic AI conversation accelerated in late 2025 and early 2026 as vendors began shipping models that can reliably use software interfaces. Google’s Gemini computer-use models demonstrated that agents can click, type, and navigate real applications, not just APIs. At the same time, research from Anthropic and MIT emphasized that the value of agents comes from constrained autonomy: clear goals, well-designed tools, and tight feedback loops.

For ecommerce, this matters because many critical tasks still live in web consoles rather than clean APIs. Marketplace dispute portals, legacy shipping dashboards, and payment provider back offices often require human interaction. A computer-use agent can handle these environments while respecting guardrails like read-only modes, approval steps, and audit logs. Super’s architecture leans on this approach, pairing API-first automations with supervised computer use where necessary.

Another important trend is specialization. Productivity research in 2026 shows that teams get better outcomes from narrowly scoped agents rather than one general “do everything” bot. Super is intentionally focused on ecommerce operations: order monitoring, customer support triage, and repetitive admin. This focus allows the agent to maintain a domain-specific computer-use cache of store layouts, common exception patterns, and historical resolutions. That computer-use cache reduces latency and error rates because the agent is not relearning the same flows every day.

How to deploy Super for day-to-day ecommerce operations

Rolling out an agent like Super is not a big-bang replacement of your team. The most successful operators treat it as an operations teammate that starts with observation, then suggestions, then partial automation.

1. Start with monitored read-only access

Connect Super to your storefront, order management system, and support inboxes in read-only mode. Let it build situational awareness: order volumes, SLA breaches, refund frequency, and recurring customer issues. During this phase, Super builds its initial computer-use cache by mapping where information lives and how your tools behave.

2. Introduce suggestion-first actions

Next, allow Super to propose actions rather than execute them. Examples include draft replies for “Where is my order?” tickets, flagged orders that look like fraud, or suggested refunds based on your policy. Operators review and approve, which trains the agent’s reinforcement signals.

3. Automate the boring, escalate the risky

Once confidence is high, enable automatic handling of low-risk tasks: status updates, address-change confirmations, and routine admin clean-up. High-risk actions like chargebacks or large refunds remain gated. The agent continuously updates its computer-use cache as interfaces change, ensuring resilience when platforms ship UI updates.

Implementation checklist

  • Define clear boundaries: which tasks are fully automated, which require approval, and which are off-limits.
  • Connect core data sources: storefront, OMS, helpdesk, shipping, and payments.
  • Document policies (refunds, replacements, fraud thresholds) in machine-readable form.
  • Enable logging and audit trails for every agent action.
  • Schedule weekly reviews of agent decisions to correct drift.
  • Plan for UI change monitoring so the computer-use cache stays fresh.

Risks and limits

Agentic systems are powerful, but they are not magic. Computer-use agents can break when interfaces change dramatically or when unexpected pop-ups appear. This is why supervised modes and alerts matter. There are also security considerations: any agent with screen-level access must follow least-privilege principles and strong credential isolation.

Another risk is over-automation. Ecommerce is full of edge cases where human judgment protects brand trust. Super is designed to surface uncertainty rather than hide it, but operators must resist the temptation to turn everything on at once. Treat the agent as a junior operator that gets better with feedback, not as an infallible system.

FAQ

Does Super replace human support agents?
No. It reduces repetitive workload so humans can focus on complex or emotional cases.

Can it work with marketplaces that don’t have APIs?
Yes, through supervised computer-use flows backed by approval gates.

How is data kept secure?
By using scoped credentials, encrypted storage, and detailed audit logs.

What happens when tools change their UI?
The agent updates its computer-use cache and alerts operators if confidence drops.

Sources

Ready to stop babysitting dashboards?

Give your ecommerce operation a real computer‑using agent.